Answer:
anguage
Download PDF
Watch
Edit
The Portuguese Burghers[1][2][3] are an ethnic group in Sri Lanka, of mixed Portuguese and Sri Lankan descent.[4] They are Roman Catholic and spoke the Sri Lanka Indo-Portuguese language, a creole based on Portuguese. In modern times, English has become the common language while Sinhalese is taught in school as a second language. Many Portuguese Burghers living on the east coast of Sri Lanka are of Portuguese descent; this is evident in the Sri Lanka-Indo Portuguese language, which has many affiliations to Sinhalese and Portuguese.[5] They are mixed with other Burgher people, including Dutch Burghers. However, Portuguese Burghers are not Dutch Burghers.[6]
<span>Recently, alienation levels have soared among ... poorer classes... who failed to finish high school.
The widening income gap in the United States is putting pressure on the economy in more ways than one. A huge stressor being that the schooling process is making it harder for lower income groups to compete for jobs in the market. This starts with schools in poorer districts that have higher rates of failing and high turnover in teaching. Kids stuck in these areas are immediately subjected to a much lower success rate of getting into college or simply learning technical skills for the service industry.</span>
Verbal and nonverbal communication, active listening skills, and refusal skills.